Gaza’s legion of war-wounded battles to forge new lives

GAZA CITY: Every time he hears a loud noise, Imed al-Firi hides his healthy leg under a cushion – a reflex he developed after the summer of 2014, when Israeli tank fire struck his Gaza home and robbed him of his right leg.

He is among thousands of Gazans learning to live with disabilities or missing limbs after three wars between Palestinian militants in the territory and Israel since 2008.

Beyond limited medical care in Gaza, they also face a lack of facilities for the disabled in the Palestinian enclave run by a movement Hamas, which has been under an Israeli blockade for nearly a decade.

More than 75,000 Gazans suffer from some form of disability, a third of them linked to conflict in the territory of 1.9 million people, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The 2014 war alone, the deadliest of the three conflicts, wounded 11,000 people.

Israel strictly controls goods entering the Gaza Strip to keep out items that could be employed to build weapons or tunnels, which have been used to carry out attacks.

At the same time, Gaza’s border with Egypt remains largely closed.

So far this year, 4,562 tonnes of medical materials have entered Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing with Israel, according to COGAT, the Israeli defence ministry unit that oversees it.

COGAT says it has made an effort to improve health assistance for Gazans, though UN officials and others have called for a complete lifting of the blockade.

Israeli authorities hand out limited numbers of permits to Gazans to leave the territory.

Every day hundreds of Gazans enter Israel – 22,635 in 2016 including those accompanying them – for treatment there or for care in the West Bank or abroad, COGAT says.

However, in July one out of three were refused or did not receive a response to their request to leave Gaza to visit a hospital, according to the World Health Organization.

The total number of those who made a request was 2,040. Those who were refused or did not receive a response included 146 children, the WHO said.

Orthopaedics is among the medical specialities most in demand in Gaza, along with oncology, paediatrics, haematology and ophthalmology, the WHO says.

“More than 2,300 Gazans need a prosthetic,” Farah said, while his factory supplies between 12 and 18 people a month with assistance from the Red Cross.

Psychological counselling is also required to help them adjust, said Mamadou Sow, head of the ICRC’s Gaza branch.

Such counselling is not only to help people learn to live without a limb, but also to assist their social integration, he said.

There is also a need to push for access for the disabled in public spaces and convince “authorities and the population at large that the disabled can do great things if we give them the opportunity,” said Sow.

Firi says he has “gained confidence in himself” and learnt that he can help others, particularly through organising them.